The Pill May Triple Your Risk Of Developing Crohn's Disease

The Pill May Triple Your Risk Of Developing Crohn's Disease

Researchers have found that women taking the oral contraceptive pill may be tripling their risk of developing Crohn’s disease. The risk is even higher for the morning after pill.

Researchers have found that the synthetic hormones present in the pill can weaken the gut and raise the risk of Crohn’s disease. The levels of hormones in the morning after pill are much higher, and repeated use of this contraception can heighten the risk of the disease even further.

Crohn’s disease is a serious autoimmune disease and its incidence has skyrocketed since the 1960s. We are seeing an increasing number of patients with the condition at our clinics. It produces symptoms such as intense abdominal pain and diarrhea. A study of 230,000 American women led by Dr Khalili, a Harvard gastroenterologist found the risk was three times greater in women who had used the pill for five years or more, compared to women who had never taken it.

Dr Khalili said that changing a woman’s natural sex hormone levels does three things that could put them at higher risk of Crohn’s disease:

It makes the gut lining more permeable (ie. causes leaky gut)

Reduces levels of ‘friendly’ bacteria in the intestines

Adversely affects the immune system

We have known for a long time that the pill causes leaky gut and creates an imbalance between good and bad bacteria in the intestines. Now we are learning that these harmful effects are significant enough to create a potentially life threatening autoimmune disease.